17.1438, Sum: Terminology Development in Amerindian Languages

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LINGUIST List: Vol-17-1438. Tue May 09 2006. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 17.1438, Sum: Terminology Development in Amerindian Languages

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1)
Date: 07-May-2006
From: José Álvarez < jalvar at cantv.net >
Subject: Terminology Development in Amerindian Languages 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Tue, 09 May 2006 15:20:11
From: José Álvarez < jalvar at cantv.net >
Subject: Terminology Development in Amerindian Languages 
 

Regarding query: http://linguistlist.org/issues/17/17-1090.html#1

My thanks to the following respondents (alphabetically ordered):

Abolfazl Zarnikhi [a_zarnikhi2002 at yahoo.com]
Ana Maria Schmitt [dookita at web.de]
Bernadine Raiskums [berna at gci.net]
Bob Richmond RSRICHMOND at aol.com
Christopher Miller [miller.christopher at uqam.ca]
Doris Fagua [dorisfagua at yahoo.com]
Gordon Bronitsky [g.bronitsky at att.net]
Harold F. Schiffman [haroldfs at ccat.sas.upenn.edu]
Jon Reyhner [Jon.Reyhner at NAU.EDU]
Judith M. Maxwell [maxwell at tulane.edu]
Pius ten Hacken [P.Ten-Hacken at swansea.ac.uk]
Ray Stegeman [ray-dee_stegeman at uuplus.com]
Tania Granadillo [taniag at email.arizona.edu]
William H. Wilson/Pila Wilson [pila_w at leoki.uhh.hawaii.edu]

Regarding references, I received different sorts of replies. Some of them
directed me to bibliographical items dealing with the specific problem of
terminology development, while others refer to the wider area of language
policy/planning:

- Calvet, Louis-Jean. (2005). La guerre des langues. Hachette. 
- Calvet, Louis-Jean. (2005). Sociolinguistique. PUF.
- Fishman, Joshua A. (2006). Do Not Leave Your Language Alone. The Hidden
Status Agendas Within Corpus Planning in Language Policy. Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates.
- Hinton, Leanne and Ken Hale. (eds.) 2001. The Green Book of Language
Revitalization in Practice. Academic Press.
- Kennedy, Elaine. (1997) Terminology: A Practical Approach. Linguatech.
- Landau, Sidney I. (1989). Dictionaries: The Art and Craft of
Lexicography. Cambridge University Press. 2nd edition (April 26, 2001) 
- Maxwell, Judith. (2003). Runuk'ik K'ak'a' Taq Tzij: Creación de
Neologismos Pedagógicos. Guatemala: Ministerio de Educación.
- Wright, Sue Ellen and Gerhard Budin (eds.). (1997). Handbook of
Terminology Management: Basic Aspects of Terminology Management (Vol. 1).
John Benjamins.

I also received information about past, present and future projects in this
area. Pius ten Hacken gives information about work beginning on terminology
in Benin (Edo in Ethnologue), spoken in Nigeria. Abolfazl Zarnikhi gives
news about a terminology project headed by Shahin Nematzadeh in Iran.
Judith Maxwell informs about the experience in Guatemala with Mayan
languages, under the Dirección General de Educación Bilingüe (DIGEBI), the
bilingual branch of the Ministry of Education. She was kind enough to fax
me a boolet with guidelines for that work. Jon Reyhner pointed out a
comprehensive report on The Mohawk Language Standardisation Project, in
Ontario, Canada. Christopher Miller suggested contacting the Commissioner
of Official Languages for the Territory of Nunavut in Canada. Harold
Schiffman commented on the situation in India where various languages have
tried to develop registers for science and technology, but have failed. 

Schiffman, who has reflected and written considerably about language
policies, feels "very pessimistic about register development for science
and technology, because people who do serious science want to be in the
same ''loop'' as serious international scholars, who tend to use English or
another LOWC." He included part of a larger article on diglossia and
language policy in and around Afghanistan, where he outlines the problems.
He thinks that it's not feasible to put every language on an equal basis,
among other resasons, because many languages lack scientific and technical
registers: 

"Another issue in creating new registers is that, as we noted above, new
registers are created by the users and developers of the particular
discipline or subdiscipline that they are working in. Language purists
always want to show that their language is capable of being used for
scientific purposes (i.e. it is sophisticated enough and 'intellectual'
enough to serve this purpose) but what this entails is creating vocabulary
for everything that has already been developed in another language. This is
a daunting task, not only for the committees tasked with the job of
translating (usually) the vocabulary and terminology of another language,
but also a daunting task for the users, who must now become comfortable
with terminology provided to them, not by users or scientific researchers
in their field, but by language pundits intent on creating vocabulary that
is wholly based on indigenous sources. Earlier in the industrial
revolution, this was less difficult, and nations like Japan that decided in
modernize beginning in the 19th century were able to adapt by borrowing
much of the vocabulary already in use in other, more 'modern' languages.
But 'late modernizers' often resist borrowing, so are faced with an almost
insurmountable task-create new terminology, and convince their own people
to adopt and use it."

I must confess that I found his fears justified and his arguments very
persuasive, although they refer mainly to higher education and scientific
research, whereas my query refers to primary and secondary education. Of
course, his arguments do not address the problem of technical feasibility,
but the problems of desirability and economic viability of such
terminological enterprises. Creating new terms using whatever means are
available is feasible, though not always viable and socially relevant. It
may be the case that we must come to terms with some degree of inevitable
diglossia. However, it is a matter of life-or-death to develop scientific
terminology for schools, if bilingual education and language maintenance
programmes are to have any sense at all. 

Although the number of replies does not allow me to evaluate the general
situation of terminological projects for minority languages, it seems to me
that one of the most interesting success stories is the one of The Hawaiian
Lexicon Committee, headed by Larry Kimura Hawaiian (as several respondents
also seem to agree). I was fortunate enough to receive a very kind and
informative letter about the experience from William/Pila Wilson, whom I
quote in extenso:

"[Y]ou might be interested in learning about the work of the Hawaiian
language lexicon committee housed here at the University of Hawai'i at
Hilo. I work in the College of Hawaiian language (Ka Haka 'Ula O
Ke'elikolani) which was mandated by the state government legislature in
1997. Among research, teaching, and curriculum development and lexicon
development duties, our college also has a P-12 laboratory school program
where we try out new methodologies, terminologies, and teacher training
programs.

Hawaiian is currently used as a medium of education from preschool through
grade 12 in selected Hawai'i schools serving about 2,000 students annually,
most of whom are descendants of speakers, but who have grown up speaking
English rather than Hawaiian in the home. With the protection of these
schools, the number of native speakers is growing along with the strong
increase in second language speakers. There was a history of Hawaiian being
used in this way in the 1800s, but Hawaiian medium schools were made
illegal from 1896 until 1986. There was thus much work to be done to create
materials for the schools. While much work remains, quite a bit has been
done by the lexicon committee and its work is available on the web under
Mamaka Kaiao. Other sites of interest are under the Aha Punana Leo, Kualono
and Ulukau."

Finally, Gordon Bronitsky kindly informs that he is "working to create
Native Nations, Native Voices--a festival to honor contemporary Native
language writers. To honor Native language authors, Native language writers
have been invited to participate in a week-long festival. Writers will read
from their works in their own languages; National language translations
will be made available to the audience at the option of each writer [...]
throughout Native America and beyond, a small but growing body of writers
are giving new voice to Native languages, using their own languages to
write about and confront the world they live in, the world of the Twenty
First Century. Often unknown outside their own communities, such writers
have much to say to all of us."

Here I list some useful links suggested by my respondents:
 
The Commissioner of Official Languages for the Territory of Nunavut in
Canada, and other links related to this experience:

http://langcom.nu.ca/en_index.html

http://www.multedata.ca/user/bin/inuktituttools.ppt

http://www.nunatsiaq.com/archives/nunavut021011/news/nunavut/21011_08.html

http://www.gov.nu.ca/Nunavut/English/news/2003/may/may26a.shtml

http://www.nunavut.com/nunavut99/english/our.html

http://www.itk.ca/environment/water-glossary-inuktitut.php

http://action.attavik.ca/home/langcom/attach/English%20OLC%20Newsletter%2011.pdf


The Hawai'i experience:

http://www.hulasource.com/kboo/makamohavo.html

http://www.ahapunanaleo.org/

http://www.olelo.hawaii.edu/eng/

http://ulukau.org/english.php


A report from The Mohawk Language Standardisation Project can be found here:

http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/training/literacy/mohawk/mohawk.html

The document where Harold F. Schiffman addresses this can be found here:

http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/messeas/regrep/node2.html 

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics
                     Lexicography





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